AuthorTopic: Needed SMALL LINUX... (Read 14988 times)

I just want to add this: Standard is almost perfect, IMO. Is not about just being light for old hardware, as Granny pointed many times, is about efficiency. Even when I have a decent machine, I dont want to run unnecessary stuff, daemons, unuseful bloated things, etc, etc. Is a waste of resources, energy and time. The system needs more attention in security, in stability. An efficient system is great in many senses. You dont need to upgrade hardware every six month. VL runs great in 1ghz cpu and 512 mb of ram. Its greener, we all know that is important now. The system is more simple, ie, more easy to maintain / configure / customize.So, I dont see the point of change something great. Of course, always is room for improvement, and perhaps in a long future better features will be added, and others needs just to be well documented, as the install in a usb flashdrive or a very minimal base install with the chance to grow via slapt-get.Again, if you need a very small linux for really old hardware, you can have basicLinux in a floppy, DSL / Puppy Linux, in a 50megs iso, and so on... There is a Linux distro for each person in this planet.

« Last Edit: September 24, 2007, 05:31:04 am by rbistolfi »

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"There is a concept which corrupts and upsets all others. I refer not to Evil, whose limited realm is that of ethics; I refer to the infinite."Jorge Luis Borges, Avatars of the Tortoise. --Jumalauta!!

Well like I said, once upon a time Standard WAS the trimmed-down version. I just wanna see it get back to that!

maybe some one can volunteer to do it.......

Not me baby! Those nifty distro's that trim every teeny tiny little piece of fat of their packages so they can make the size quota allowed, are also trimming away things that SOMEONE will miss and raise heck about. Packages would be built without support for other packages. I'm not a fan of most minimalistic applications. When I'm working on something, I want to get it done. Not spending my time starting a project with one application, and then have to load up one or more "helper" applications to complete what I'm working on.

Giving credit where credit is due though, those "micro distro's" do a fantastic job. But still, things are lacking.GrannyGeek said so many things well. This quote in particular:

Quote

The computing universe moves on. Hardware today is much more sophisticated than it was 10 years ago, or five years ago.

VL accommodates the old, and the new very, very well. To do that, and keep the majority happy, there needs to be some stuff on those CD's. Compared to other distro's, VL is a small download.

I agree that VL Standard approaches perfection, but would also like to see a barebones version of VL for the purpose of custom installs and experimentation. So I favor a ~200 MB version of VL with selectable DE/WM.

Back on monthly quota of download. From my experience, snail mail will be faster in this case. You get someone "over here" with fast connection to burn all isos you need and send to "over there" by regular snail mail. You will get the desired result faster and the net quota is available for solving questions that may arise.

There seems to be quite a lot of opinions about what Standard/SOHO should be about.I actually feel like 5.8 Standard as some of you have pointed out, it's perfect as it is. Nothing to change, works well. 5 browsers to choose from, why on earth would anyone want to cut down this possibility that VL provides???And it's not only about the browsers. Several apps for each purpose, it's the user who decides what to use and what not.I don't see much sense in having VL becoming one of the smallest distros with perhaps a total size of around 200-250MB without the possiblity to choose what to use.It's so much easier in my humble opinion to have users customize a perfect VL install and make it to what they want to have.

I use Fluxbox now since I felt like a change from KDE, WindowMaker, E17, IceWM, XFCE. I've tried probably around 90% of the WM's/DE's ( I refer to the MOST USED ONES!) at least so that I get an impression about them. It's perfect that Standard is with XFCE, SOHO with KDE. Then the user can choose from the repositories what WM/DE to go with.IMHO, it doesn't have to be so [censored] difficult. Keep VL as it is, keep up the good work! I'm at least very happy on the development.

Good very small distros <330MB abound. Some even have KDE personally though about building a mini Vector but I've pretty much decided I don't need to reinvent the wheel. As much as I like VL I don't have to use it exclusively, do I?

A great choice for you would be Slax 6 RC6. It's just under 200MB and has KDE but no OpenOffice. OOO could be added and you'd still be around 300MB. Slax is a live CD based on Slackware 12 but can be installed to a hard drive in frugal mode (think Knoppix Poorman's install) much like Damn Small Linux. See http://www.slax.org (NOTE: I have a HD install script for Slax and AliXe I'm testing but I probably won't have time to finish it until after I move.)

Other good choices for those who like Xfce and don't demand KDE are:

AliXe -- Slax with Xfce 4.4.1 and some other apps, plus French localization available ~328MB http://alixe.org

Good very small distros <330MB abound. Some even have KDE personally though about building a mini Vector but I've pretty much decided I don't need to reinvent the wheel. As much as I like VL I don't have to use it exclusively, do I?

A great choice for you would be Slax 6 RC6. It's just under 200MB and has KDE but no OpenOffice. OOO could be added and you'd still be around 300MB. Slax is a live CD based on Slackware 12 but can be installed to a hard drive in frugal mode (think Knoppix Poorman's install) much like Damn Small Linux. See http://www.slax.org (NOTE: I have a HD install script for Slax and AliXe I'm testing but I probably won't have time to finish it until after I move.)

Other good choices for those who like Xfce and don't demand KDE are:

AliXe -- Slax with Xfce 4.4.1 and some other apps, plus French localization available ~328MB http://alixe.org